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119 East Solomon thru to Slaton — Griffin, Ga. — Parking in Rear of Store
Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1968 Griffin Daily News
‘Gun Owner’
Registration
Better: Bolton
ATLANTA (UPI) — Georgia’s
top - ranking law enforcement
official says that registering gun
owners rather than guns might
be a better answer to the gun
control controversy.
Atty. Gen. Arthur Bolton said
Chattahoochee
Valley Fair
Opens Oct. 7
COLUMBUS, Ga. — The 51st
annual Chattahoochee Valley
Fair gets under way Oct. 7 with
up to 20 midway shows, some 45
rides and hour long acts. It fea
tures a country-pop singer, a tra
peze artist who performs under
a helicopter and Gentle Ben, tel
evisions celebrated black bear.
Students will be admitted free
until 6 p.m. on Tuesday and Wed
nesday Oct. 8 and 9 and may
pay reduced fares for rides on
these days until 7 p. m. accord
ing to Arthur Springer, Jr., ge
neral manager. Thursday will be
Military Day. Personnel In uni
form or with ID cards and their
dependents will be admitted at
advance sale prices. Children un
der six will be admitted free at
all times.
BUICK KOIOR UiViUIOO
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™''XrtCqtfs.l!’»«U|J The 1969 Buick Riviera. More elegant and
i J* personal than ever. With new exclusive colors, elegant new interiors
Thoiorton.iirli c«; ano and a revolutionary new suspension system for improved handling and more
•'.MllJlt fuiiitinn.il || 1.1 Uli II 111 111 driving ease than you’ve ever enjoyed before. Completely equipped
more responsive suspension for IraMp-teS®*, / . power brakesand much, much more.
improved handling and ride. And the \\VB>?. A»R F ../.
new available Stage I optional
high-performance package.
Th e 1064 Buick LeSabre. New colors, new interiors and Buick’s revolutionary
jF' new suspension system for a LeSabre that's more appealing than
evtr before. More response and economv from a standard 350cublc
inch VB. And a long, impressive list of salety features.
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The 1969 Buick Wildcat, With more Buick luxury
and rakish new styling. With Buick’s new suspension system and a— " , K
4Jocubic inch V 8 standard. And a longlist of safety features. ~~— J/ggßiSgl‘ s
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The 1969 Buicks.
The 1969 Buick Electra 225. New. Beautifully new.
A distinctive new profile. With a big 430 cubic inch V 8
and fH-400automatic transmission standard. aj
Featuring a new 60/40 seat that you can order. Sure, straight
tracking from a revolutionary new suspension system. S
And much, much more. M__
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There are many new features on every 1969 Buick. Many features you'll like. See them. Sec if they won’t turn you into a Buick owner. And a Buick salesman.
No wonder Buick owners keep selling Buicks for us.
Wouldn’t you really rather have a Buick?
such a law could keep better
tabs on who has guns and how
they are used.
He said that under the owner
registration idea, which came to
him from Asst. Atty. Gen. Lee
Perry, gun owners would be re
quired to show ‘‘sufficient proof
of character and competence
with firearms,” before they
could get a permit.
The applicant would have to
pass a test on the safe use of
pistols, rifles, and shotguns or
prove that he had completed a
firearms safety course.
“There would be no registra
tion of individual firearms, thus
quieting the legitimate fears of
honest sportsmen and gun col
lectors that the guns will lead
to burdensome red tape and ex
pensive fees which ultimately
will result in confiscation of
their firearms,” Perry said.
DEADBEAT
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(UPl)—Service station atten
dant Wilber Boop said a man
driving a battered old car
pulled into his station and order
50 cents worth of gas.
Boop told police the man not
only refused to pay the bill but
also demanded trading stamps.
When Boop refused, the man hit
him and drove away.
9
Woman’s View
Whoever Called Baby
‘Bundle Os Joy’?
Woman’s View
By JOAN HANAUER
NEW YORK (UPl)—Whoever
named newborn babies bundles
of joy never changed a dirty
diaper at 2 a.m. or tried to coax
an affectionate response from a
cross-eyed, bald-headed infant.
As a guess, it seems likely the
term came from a doting-at-a
distance grandparent. Even
adoring fathers know better.
What every woman should
know about babies, particularly
the expectant mother walking
around in a glow of anticipatory
love, is that infants are more
like lumps than bundles, and
the joy involved rests more in
what the little lump will become
than what he is.
By the time the baby is a few
months old, of course, it all
changes and infant enters a
delightful stage of coos and
smiles.
Speaking from experience,
when I first brought my tiny
daughter home from the hospi
tal I was horrified to find my
mother-love tested by a rain of
wet and soiled diapers, burping
problems and spitting up.
Depressing Reality
What was bothing me was not
the much discussed post-natal
depression—it was depressing
reality. The picture was this:
—I was trapped in my own
home, unable to do anything on
the spur of the moment because
baby couldn’t be left alone. I
practically had to hire a
babysitter so I could go to the
supermarket, a trip that was
becoming my idea of jailbreak.
—On top of tne nousework,
which I attacked compulsively
out of the guilty feeling that as
a temporarily nonworking moth
er I had no excuse for a messy
home, there were the baby’s
chores. They weren’t difficult,
but that formula-making, sterli
zation, feeding, bathing, chang
ing, all had to be done on
schedule, not when I felt like it.
All this would have been okay
if my little daughter even knew
who I was or showed some sign
of noticing me. Instead she
stared at me—or the rug or the
slipcovers—with crossed eyes
and a vacant face.
Adding to my mounting
hysteria would be the women
who would tell me, “This is the
wonderful time—enjoy it while
you can. You’ll miss it when the
baby starts to grow.”
One night r sobbingly con
fessed to my husband the fear
that I was an unnatural mother.
He said he thought most women
felt as I did. Not entirely
reassured I began to question
friends.
“I didn't think my kids were
fun until they were old enough
to take to the zoo,” one friend,
whose two children are teen
agers, told me.
“I felt as if I were in prison,”
another said, although it didn’t
stop her from having a second
baby recently.
A third friend reminisced
about the period by saying,
“Ugh!”
Then my daughter took over
by giving me a broad grin that
obviously was intentional, not
intestinal. She made noises at
me ranging from the traditional
“coo” to something that sound
ed like “glonk,” was said in a
loud voice and obviously meant,
“Hurry up and change me,
mommy, I’m hungry.”
Almost overnight the lump
had turned into a real person
who loved carrots and hated her
vitamin drops. I melted into a
puddle of sentimental slush on
that first smile and never
hardened again.
But I wish someone had told
me what every mother ought to
know.
HAZARDOUS PORT
MINER A L WELLS, Tex.
(UPl)—Cary Burns and Danny
Ladd found they had a lot in
common when they wound up in
the same room at Palo Pinto
General Hospital.
Burns and Ladd, both 17,
were both accidentally shot In
the foot on the same day when
frog hunting with two friends.
The accidents occurred five
miles apart within two hours of
each other.